Essential Guide to the IEB English Exam: Exam structures analysis, practice questions and expert tips
and strategies
BE FULLY PREPARED FOR THE FINAL EXAM
Detailed analysis of Paper I & II
Comprehensive guide to answering every question
Focused sets of practice questions & answers
Concise reviews of the key concepts tested
Expert tips and strategies
Accompanying CD with complete mock exams & suggested answers
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Everything needed to master IEB English
Home Language Papers I & II
answers
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Table of ContentsForeword ............................................................................. 5
About The English Experience .................................................................................. 5
Our approach ........................................................................................................... 5
Using this resource ................................................................................................... 6
Background to the novel .................................................... 8Author background .................................................................................................. 8
‘The Benefi ciaries, boarding school and me’ ................................................................................8
Interview with Sarah Penny ...........................................................................................................11
Historical context ................................................................................................... 14Apartheid timeline ............................................................................................................................14
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission ...............................................................................17
Enrichment tasks ................................................................................................................................23
Introduction to the novel ....................................................................................... 33Synopsis ................................................................................................................................................33
Major characters .................................................................................................................................33
Themes ..................................................................................................................................................34
Fact sheet ..............................................................................................................................................35
What the critics said (extracted reviews and discussion points) ......................................35
Enrichment task ..................................................................................................................................36
Critical commentary: part one ........................................37Preparation ............................................................................................................ 37
How to read novels for academic analysis ................................................................................37
Glossary of important literary terms ...........................................................................................38
Summaries and analysis ........................................................................................ 39Using this section ...............................................................................................................................39
Setting the scene – London and the Eastern Cape (Pages 3 to 17) .................................39
Restlessness, escape and denial (Pages 18 to 44) ..................................................................43
Turning point (Pages 45 to 58) ......................................................................................................49
The search for true things (Pages 59 to 70) ..............................................................................54
Fractures and traditions (Pages 71 to 93) ..................................................................................59
The language of bodies (Pages 94 to 110) ................................................................................66
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Critical commentary: part two ........................................72Summaries and analysis ........................................................................................ 72
Searches and hiding places (Pages 113 to 138) ......................................................................72
Discovery and disappearance (Pages 139 to 166) .................................................................79
Visitations from the past (Pages 167 to 179) ............................................................................88
The damages of childhood (Pages 180 to 198) .......................................................................93
Resolution and reconciliation (Pages 199 to 211) ..................................................................99
Homecoming (Pages 212 to 223) ..............................................................................................107
Enrichment tasks .............................................................................................................................112
Literary analysis .............................................................126Plot analysis ......................................................................................................... 126
Narration and structure ........................................................................................ 127
Character analysis ................................................................................................ 130
Themes ................................................................................................................ 136
Motifs and symbols .............................................................................................. 141
Important quotations .......................................................................................... 143
Enrichment tasks ................................................................................................. 150
The literary essay ...........................................................158Essay writing techniques ..................................................................................... 158
Annotated essay examples .................................................................................. 163
General essay questions ...................................................................................... 168
Examination preparation ..................................................................................... 172
Revision reading quiz .......................................................................................... 173
Suggested further reading .................................................................................. 177
Perforated rubrics for enrichment tasks and essays ....179Review writing task .............................................................................................. 179
Transactional writing task ..................................................................................... 181
Literary essay ........................................................................................................ 183
Acknowledgments .........................................................191
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ForewordAbout the English ExperienceAware of the scarcity of genuinely fresh and complete English educational resources,
The English Experience remains dedicated to publishing the very best in Matric English
resources. The team of passionate, talented experts behind The English Experience
work tirelessly to ensure that every resource encourages insight, growth and debate
— enriching and challenging both educators and learners, without losing sight of the
important goal of exam readiness and success.
The English Experience is an independent South African publishing house that specialises in
developing high-quality IEB Matric English educational resources for educators and learners.
Focused on bringing the text to life, every resource The English Experience publishes incorporates a
range of features, including content, contextual and essay questions, tear-out rubrics and stimulating
enrichment materials, designed to encourage a critical appreciation of the text and inspire the high
order thinking for which examiners are always looking.
The world-class English Experience team includes highly experienced educators, some with over
20 years of classroom experience, passionate literary experts in various fi elds, such as historical
fi ction, poetry and Shakespeare, fanatical historians and researchers, creative writers, skilled editors,
pernickety proofreaders and obsessive fact checkers — together with spirited university lecturers and
enthusiastic young minds who ensure our approach remains unique and fresh.
While exam readiness and success is a non-negotiable, our aspiration is to inspire a genuine interest
in, and love of, English literature.
Our approachPerhaps the toughest challenge with teaching literature to modern learners is convincing
them that the extra eff ort required in reading a novel — compared with the passive
immediacy of movies and TV shows — is worth it. Decoding the language and bringing
the text to life in the imagination can be taxing for learners so it’s perhaps not surprising
that many of them see novels as works through which they have to slog to pass an exam.
This resource has been written with this reality in mind. Even though the language and settings of
the novel are likely to be immediately accessible to Matric learners, particular attention has been
paid to providing the kind of context and insight necessary to help them fully empathise with the
characters and their struggles.
We passionately believe that studying literature rewards us with a broader, deeper understanding
of ourselves and those around us. That is why this resource does more than provide learners with a
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comprehensive, detailed analysis of the text. It also encourages them to engage with the novel on a
personal level and to uncover their own responses through the extensive chapter-specifi c questions,
enrichment tasks and essay topics.
Throughout this resource, learners are challenged to agree or disagree with both the characters and
events in the novel and the analysis provided. By formulating and expressing their own responses to
the opinions, ideas and themes explored in the novel, learners are encouraged to refl ect and grow
as individuals as well as students.
In the end, we have approached The Benefi ciaries the same way we approach every text: with two,
interrelated goals in mind. The fi rst, non-negotiable objective is to ensure exam readiness and success.
The second ambition is to inspire a genuine interest in, and appreciation of, the work being studied.
Using this resourceThis comprehensive resource includes: an extensive
introduction to the novel, the author and its historical
background; detailed summaries; rich literary
analyses; diverse, chapter-specifi c short questions,
challenging essay questions and stimulating
enrichment tasks. In short, everything needed to
study the novel intensively and to bring it to life.
We recommend working through the background to the
novel section fi rst so that learners become familiar with
the author, the novel’s historical context, including the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the transition
to democracy, and the novel itself.
Some learners might have preconceived ideas about
apartheid and even a block about studying this period.
This resource has been written with such students in mind and particular attention has been paid to
breathing new life into this fascinating transitional time.
The ‘introduction to the novel’ segment completes this section, giving learners an initial overview and
appreciation of the plot, characters and themes, before they engage with the text itself.
By working through this comprehensive introductory section fi rst, learners will be prepared, engaged
and able to read the novel with the right mindset.
Once learners have been prepared and have read through the novel, the summaries and analyses
provided in the critical commentary section ensure that a solid foundation of knowledge is laid.
Key to using the boxes in this resource
i Info Box
Definition/Glossary Box
Quirky Fact Box
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Each chapter and sub-section is summarised and analysed separately. Extensive glossaries are included
and learners are required to engage with the content directly through chapter-specifi c questions.
Learners can then methodically build on this foundation, only dealing with the whole novel once
they have worked through it step-by-step.
At the end of the summaries, there are also a series of enrichment tasks and a wide selection of
rigorous essay topics, ensuring that learners also tackle the novel in its entirety.
The literary analysis section includes analyses of the plot, narration and structure, characters, themes,
motifs and symbols. It also highlights key quotations from the novel, with suggested explanations.
To ensure exam readiness and success, the resource also features an extensive section on the literary
essay. This section provides guidelines on writing literary essays, two annotated examples from which
to learn, and a selection of essay topics. It also includes suggested further reading, a useful revision
reading quiz and suggestions on how to prepare for the fi nal exam.
We hope you enjoy using this resource as much as we enjoyed putting it together. If you have any
queries, please do not hesitate to contact us.
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Background to the novelAuthor backgroundIn The Benefi ciaries, author Sarah Penny has created an extremely accessible, insightful
and thought-provoking novel that explores the notions of truth, memory and identity in
contemporary South Africa. Penny’s astute portrayal is drawn from her personal experience
of life as a teenager in South Africa during the 1980s. In this section, Penny recalls life at
school and the events and characters that helped shape her world and inspire the novel.
‘The Benefi ciaries, boarding school and me’, by Sarah Penny‘It’s your memory and their forgetting. You can make yourself remember, but you can’t make them not
forget. So you go there and you make yourself remember and you put yourself in that place and then …
your memory fi nds their forgetting. And it makes you angrier.’ (p.169)
I think I was rather indulged before I went to boarding school. I was the youngest child in a large family
in Cape Town and all the older children had left home already, leaving me as the centre of attention.
Apart from my very nice parents and my wonderful nanny, there were dogs and cats and budgies
and squirrels in the roof and we all lived together in a beautiful early Georgian National Monument
surrounded by a huge garden with a river running through it.
Nothing lasts forever, though, and, when I was sixteen, my parents and I decided between us that it would
be interesting to go off to boarding school and meet some new people and have some new experiences.
The school was about a ten hour drive from Cape Town, in a small rural town in the Eastern Cape, not
far from the border with the independent Bantustan of the Transkei. It wasn’t an absolute backwater,
nonetheless. There were shops and restaurants, two cinemas and even a university.
The Rhodesian connectionI hated boarding school from the get-go. The food was terrible, there was never enough hot water to
go round and the uniform was drab and depressing. More than that, however, the whole ideology of
the place was horrifi c. In Cape Town, my school used to go to chapel to pray for a peaceful transition
to democracy. There was none of that liberal malarkey in the Eastern Cape.
This was 1987. In the Southern African sub-region, Angola and Mozambique had succumbed to black
rule back in 1975 and Rhodesia was renamed Zimbabwe under a black government in 1980. South
Africa was only headed one way. The staff and pupils at my boarding school were not very pleased
about it. They were not going to accept black rule while there was a man, woman or child among
them left standing.
Run by a man who gave us to believe he’d been something or other important in the Rhodesian Bush
War, the school had an informal policy of employing other people who’d served in that confl ict. Some of
the staff still used their military titles like Major Carlton does in the book. There were a fair few of them,
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as well as all the Rhody kids whose parents didn’t want them educated alongside blacks in the new
Zimbabwe. I hated Rhodesian kids at the time. They were ruthless, self-suffi cient and tough as old boots.
But you don’t spend two years immersed in the ruins of someone else’s war without becoming a
little obsessed with it yourself. My most recent book, The Lies We Shared, is partially set during the
Rhodesian Bush War.
Adjusting to civilian lifeBoarding school ended and I was turfed out along with my trunk and my diaries and what civilian clothes
I had. I was a bit shell-shocked after boarding school. As much as I hated it, I had got used to institutional
life. It was odd having to assemble a whole wardrobe and, at university, I kept calling the lecturers ‘Sir’
and ‘Ma’am’ — to much mirth from the other students, most of whom hadn’t been boarders.
I was free and out of school, but I kept having very bleak nightmares that I was still there. Even though
I had really happy times at university in my twenties and made life-long friends, there was always a
shadow hanging over me of not coping with my school memories very well.
Writing The Benefi ciariesWhen I was 28 I won a South African National Arts Council Scholarship to study a Master’s Degree in
Creative Writing (MLitt) at St Andrews University in Scotland. I needed to fi nd a dissertation topic. My
anger towards the school hadn’t gone, but it had fi nally cooled into something that I could draw on
to mould a novel. I started writing The Benefi ciaries.
I changed some details in the book. It was a private school and I made it into a government school, for
example. Also, there were a number of black children in the classes, mostly the off spring of Bantustan
despots being educated at the expense of the South African government. I changed that because
most South African schools attended by whites were government and whites-only and I wanted
the novel to refl ect the educational dynamics in the country as a whole. I kept many descriptive
elements exactly as they were in my experience, though, such as the practice of isolating children in
the sanatorium before expulsion.
The TRC: lifting the icebergAt the same time as I was writing the novel, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in South
Africa was drawing to a close. For the last few years, it had staged public platforms to record the
testimony of both the victims and the perpetrators of apartheid. There is much criticism of the TRC
now, but, if you had grown up during apartheid as a white person, in that culture of silence and
conformity, it was the most extraordinary thing to listen to those hearings.
The TRC made sense out of the atmosphere that had shrouded us at school. It felt as if, during those
school years of constant suppression and pettiness, I’d seen the tip of the iceberg and suspected the
looming shape under the water, but, through the TRC, was fi nally able to see the iceberg lifted clear
and to realise the enormity of what apartheid was and what it did to the people who lived through it.
The good things that came out of schoolThere were a couple of good things that came out of boarding school. I had a fantastic English teacher.
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She always made me feel, not only that writing was a worthy and noble ambition, but that I had it in
me to be a writer as well.
One other thing that that school did do for
me, that I now recognise and value, was to
widen my perspective of who I was. South
Africa was incredibly parochial at the time
because we were cut off from virtually
all international contact, but there were
children at that school from white enclaves
all over Africa, which made me see that I
wasn’t just a South African, but part of a
whole history of whites colonising Africa,
and everything that meant.
I have never really thought of myself as a
South African novelist. I think of myself as a
writer from Africa. So, despite everything, I
have a debt to that school for making the
whole business of identity such a thorny
thing to settle — at such a relatively impressionable age — that I have had to give quite a lot of
thought to the matter in the two and a half intervening decades since I left.
Sarah Penny was born in Cape Town in 1970. She
was schooled in Cape Town and the Eastern Cape.
After school, she went on to study at the University
of Cape Town, Rhodes University and St Andrews
University, Scotland.
Penny has lectured in English and Creative Writing at
Brunel University since 2003, where she is currently
reading for a PhD in Creative Writing. She has
published three books with Penguin South Africa: The
Whiteness Of Bones (a travel narrative) and two novels,
The Benefi ciaries and The Lies We Shared.
Her abiding interests are in African history, culture and
languages, particularly from southern and East Africa.
Another lifelong fascination is African wildlife, animal
behaviour and nature conservation. She lives in North
London, is married to the Mafi a historian John Dickie
and has two young children.
i
Novel or autobiography?
It is often said that an author’s fi rst novel is his/her most autobiographical, but this remains a
very diffi cult claim to substantiate. Where do we draw the line between author and narrator,
for instance? Are events that happen in the novel autobiographical simply because they are
similar to known events in an author’s life?
Sarah Penny has noted in a number of interviews, including this author background, that there
are numerous autobiographical elements to The Benefi ciaries and it is interesting to note these
elements, both as a way of discovering how the work was created and of getting further insight
into the meaning and messages being conveyed.
On the other hand, though, it could be a mistake to overstate the autobiographical nature of
the novel. It is, fi rst and foremost, a work of fi ction and, therefore, of the imagination. It is likely
to prove a futile and unrewarding exercise to try to precisely separate the factual elements in
the novel from those of the author’s imagination.
The Benefi ciaries is a fascinating novel, given added authenticity by the author’s experiences
of being schooled in South Africa in the 1980s. By blending historical fact and fi ction, personal
experience and the imagination, the novel successfully explores and illuminates both the
personal journey of the protagonist and the political journey of apartheid South Africa towards
healing and hope.
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Questions
1.1. Identify the Figure of Speech in the caption, ‘As the TRC scales Mount Evidence…’, and explain
how it functions to create humour in this cartoon. (2)
Enrichment tasks
Exercise 1: Visual Literacy Consider the following cartoon by Zapiro, published in
the Sowetan newspaper during the TRC hearings, and
answer the questions that follow.
?
‘Zapiro’ is the penname of
Jonathan Shapiro, a South
African cartoonist best known for
his politically satirical cartoons that
regularly appear in various national
newspapers.
i
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1.2. Identify the female character in the foreground of the cartoon and explain the symbolic nature
of her blindfold, sword and scales. (4)
1.3. Discuss the function of the skeletons in the cartoon, referring to the labels to illustrate your
answer. (3)
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Consider the following cartoon, also by Zapiro and published in the Sowetan, and answer the
questions that follow.
1.4. Explain how, and to what purpose, the cartoonist satirises the traditional legal oath made by
witnesses in court. (3)
1.5. The man depicted in the cartoon, Craig Williamson, was an apartheid operative who applied for
amnesty for a series of crimes, including kidnapping and assassination. How does the cartoonist
represent this ‘character’? Please provide evidence to support your answer. (3)
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Refer to the following short poem by Antjie Krog and answer the questions that follow.
“Clean Slate”
‘I have been given a clean slate 1
and can continue with my life.’
‘I have given a clean slate
and see how they simply continue with their lives.’
‘I am surprised about my clean slate – 5
it shows they cannot even hate properly.’
‘I am surprised that I have given a clean slate
and they simply continue as before.’
1.7. Identify the speaker(s) in Antjie Krog’s poem. (2)
1.6. What does the cartoonist suggest about Craig Williamson’s motivations in applying for amnesty?
Provide sound reasoning in support of your response by referring closely to the cartoon. (2)
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1.8. Explain to what the ‘clean slate’ of the title refers. (2)
1.9. Discuss what the poet is suggesting about the amnesty application process of the TRC, referring
closely to the poem to support your argument. (4)
1.10. Identify the common theme present in both the Zapiro cartoons and the Krog poem, providing
evidence from all three texts to support your answer. (5)
Total: [30]
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Critical commentary: part onePreparationHow to read novels for academic analysisWhen reading a novel that you are required to analyse for academic purposes, you need to
approach the text in a slightly diff erent way than you do when reading a novel for pleasure.
Here are few tips to keep in mind when reading novels for academic analysis.
• It may sound obvious, but make sure you are paying attention when you read. Often when we
are reading, our attention wanders and we don’t really take in what it is that we’re reading. Be sure
that when you’re reading a novel for academic purposes, your attention stays focused at all times
and that you are not distracted by your phone, television, friends or family members.
• Make notes in the page margins as you read. Marking important passages as you read them
will help you save time when you are looking for them again later and will also help to keep you
focused as you read.
• Underline unfamiliar words so that you can look up their defi nitions and make a note of their
meanings .
• Keep the themes of the novel in mind as you are reading and keep asking yourself how these
themes are being conveyed and developed in the narrative. Make notes of any recurring motifs
and symbols and what these represent in the text.
• Remember that you are reading for meaning (what is being said) and for form (how it is being
conveyed). Literary analysis is about detecting patterns in the text and determining how these
patterns convey particular messages.
Patterns of meaningWhat is the text saying? (i.e. Themes)
• How is the plot structured? What happens in the narrative and in what order?
• Where and when does the story take place?
• Who is the subject of the story?
• What are the recurring themes in the narrative?
• What message is being conveyed?
• How do you feel about what is happening in the story?
Patterns of formHow is it being said? (i.e. Technique)
• Who is the narrator of the text? When or on what occasion(s) is this narration taking place?
• How does the point of view from which the story is being told aff ect our understanding?
• How are the characters developed throughout the text? How do they interact with one another,
and why?
• Is the narration sequential or achronological? Are there fl ashbacks or fl ash-forwards? Why is the
narration structured in this way?
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• What kind of symbols and motifs recur in the text? What do these symbolise and how do they
reinforce the themes of the novel?
• What do the title and chapter headings tell us about this narrative and how we should interpret it?
Glossary of important literary terms
archetype, archetypical: a very typical or
common example of a particular type of person
or thing.
bildungsroman: a genre of literature in which the
protagonist, usually an adolescent, undergoes
spiritual, intellectual, moral, psychological and/
or social growth throughout the course of the
narrative and, in doing so, achieves maturity (also
known as a ‘coming of age’ story).
catharsis: the often painful process through which
a character heals, usually through the release of
strong or repressed emotions.
connotation: an idea, association or feeling that is
evoked by the use of a particular word, in addition
to its literal meaning.
context: the ‘things around the text’; the particular
circumstances that form the setting for a narrative
event, statement or idea.
denouement: the climax or fi nale of a narrative
in which the various strands of the plot are drawn
together or resolved.
diction: the choice of words used.
discourse: written or spoken communication or, in
literary terms, the treatment of a particular subject
within the narrative.
foil: a character who contrasts starkly with another
character, usually the protagonist, in order to
emphasise the particular qualities or traits of the
other character.
form: the structure or design of a particular literary
work.
genre: in literary terms, a genre is a particular
and distinguishable category of writing which
employs distinct, common conventions that are
recognisable across all works of the same genre.
ideology: a system of beliefs or ideals which often
forms the basis for a political or economic policy,
for example, apartheid.
irony: a perceptible inconsistency (sometimes
humorous) in an apparently straightforward
statement or situation which, given its particular
context, takes on the opposite meaning or
signifi cance. In the case of dramatic irony, the
reader or audience may know more about the
character’s situation or circumstances than the
character and is able to recognise a sharply
diff erent or contrasting meaning to the character’s
statements.
metaphor, metaphoric: a Figure of Speech in
which one thing is taken to represent or symbolise
something else, in order to transfer particular
associations or qualities on to the thing or idea
being represented.
paradox, paradoxical: a statement that is so
obviously untrue or contradictory that it leads the
reader to consider alternative contexts in which it
may be considered accurate; or a situation, person
or thing that combines contradictory features or
qualities.
point of view: the position or vantage point from
which the events of a story are presented to the
reader.
protagonist: the main/central character in the
narrative.
syntax: the particular arrangement of words or
phrases to create sentences, which may carry
particular emphasis or connotations.
theme: the central message, idea or insight of a
literary work.
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Summaries and analysisUsing this sectionWorking through the novel chapter by chapter ensures that a solid foundation of knowledge
is laid, and then gradually and eff ectively expanded. Learners are not required to deal with
the entire novel until they have worked through it in a methodical, step-by-step manner.
Each chapter and sub-section is summarised and analysed separately. Extensive glossaries are included
and learners are required to engage with the content directly through chapter-specifi c questions. At
the end of the summaries, there is also a series of enrichment tasks and a wide selection of rigorous
essay topics, ensuring that learners also tackle the novel in its entirety.
Setting the scene — London and the Eastern Cape (Pages 3 to 17)
Summary
The novel opens with ‘A Letter’, an unwelcome request from a woman named Nomda Qhashane. The
recipient of the letter, who is not named at this point, claims that she will not do whatever the letter
is requesting and throws the letter away in a neighbour’s dustbin.
In the following chapter, ‘1998: Contact’, set in London, Lally contacts Pim using a phone number
she was given months before. It is clear that the two have not been in contact for a number of years:
Pim is astonished to hear from Lally and both ask to be called by the more formal versions of their
names, ‘Laeticia’ and ‘Edgar’.
Lally visits Pim at his house on the other side of London, where she meets his family and has dinner
with them. Pim and his wife, Ruth, have two sons. It is revealed that Lally and Pim knew each other
as children in South Africa and that Lally still owns an ostrich farm there, although she hasn’t visited
it in over fi ve years. Pim has not taken over the running of his family’s farm, despite the fact that it is
the tradition in his family for the eldest son to do so.
The next chapter, titled ‘1978: Standard Eight: Hadedas and Earthworms’, recalls a younger Lally,
during her boarding school days in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. During her Standard Eight (Grade
10) year, Lally is seated at the window of her dormitory in the Girls’ Division of the school, looking out
over the grounds at sports fi elds and school buildings. She is enjoying the brief period of quiet and
solitude in the dormitory as the rest of the girls are at tea, eating jam sandwiches — Lally herself is a
‘diffi cult eater’ (p.11) and chooses to avoid tea.
She is holding a letter from her mother, composed of the usual news about the farm and her home
district, which she will answer later. When the other girls return to the dormitory, it is clear that
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Lally is an outsider, although not exactly unpopular. Lally is called upstairs by Emily, a prefect, and
although Lally is apprehensive about going into the senior girls’ dormitories, she has little choice
but to obey.
Emily is Pim’s girlfriend of two years and because Lally usually spends the holidays at Pim’s house,
Emily has come to regard her as a kind of younger sister (p.16). Emily shows Lally a picture of Pim,
who matriculated the previous year. Dressed in his soldier’s uniform, Pim is now in the infantry and
has been promoted to the rank of lieutenant.
AnalysisA Letter
Although the recipient of the letter and its contents are not revealed at this point, we later fi nd out that
it is a request addressed to Lally from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) for information
regarding an incident she witnessed during her school days, involving the son of Nomda Qhashane.
It is clear that Lally has no wish to fulfi l this request: her forceful actions — speaking loudly to herself
and fl inging the letter in the dustbin — suggest that the letter has reminded her of something
unpleasant or upsetting, something she would rather forget or that has even made her angry.
1998: Contact
This chapter establishes the ambiguous and even uncomfortable relationship the characters have
with their South African heritage. It is suggested that Lally and Pim were once close, although they
have been out of contact for quite some time, and their meeting is initially quite awkward.
Their insistence on the use of their full names, ‘Laeticia’ and ‘Edgar’, indicates that both have changed
substantially over the years and that they feel they are no longer the same people they were when
they last knew each other. Interestingly, however, the narrator still refers to them as ‘Lally’ and ‘Pim’,
perhaps suggesting that they have not changed as much as they may believe.
Pim speaks ‘like an Englishman’ (p.6) and has clearly been living in London for a long time. Both Lally
and Pim have left behind family farms in South Africa. Lally expresses her indiff erence to the running
of her ostrich farm, while it seems that Pim’s decision not to run his family’s farm — thus breaking
with a long-standing tradition — is a contentious issue within the family.
Pim’s wife, Ruth, is British and she becomes uncomfortable when Lally and Pim start talking about
South Africa. She ‘feels marginalised in her own home’ (p.7), excluded from Lally and Pim’s shared
heritage. There seems to be an underlying tension in Ruth and Pim’s marriage, suggested by her
irritation with Pim’s comment about her potatoes and by Pim’s consciously exaggerated eff orts to
appear as a good husband and father as he shows off for Lally.
Ruth’s feeling of exclusion is further emphasised when she ‘savagely’ (p.8) denies her son’s claim that
he is ‘a Pim’ (p.8) — the nickname given to all the eldest sons in his father’s family. It is also suggested
that Lally’s visit makes Ruth feel insecure, as she looks at herself in the mirror and tells herself that
she is ‘still a young woman’ (p.9).
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1978: Standard Eight: Hadedas and Earthworms
This is the fi rst glimpse we have of Lally at boarding school. The strict, institutional characteristics
of the school are emphasised here: the buildings are regularly laid out, the students’ time is strictly
regimented and the social hierarchy among the students is rigorously observed.
This sense of hierarchy is emphasised by Lally’s hesitation when Emily invites her up to her room (the
domain of the senior girls, where Lally has no right to be) and by the dilemma experienced by Emily’s
friend, who wants to reprimand Lally for her uneven hemline, but feels she cannot do so because
Lally has been invited up by Emily.
It is also suggested in this section that Lally has a rather cold, formal relationship with her parents.
Her letters from her mother all follow the same pattern and do not seem to contain any familiarity or
warmth. Lally herself is established as an outsider at school; she is not disliked by the other students,
but she is not popular and seems to prefer to distance herself from others. The contrast between her
and Emily is clear as Emily is depicted as popular, athletic, attractive and vivacious.
Glossary
A Lettersurreptitiously: acting in a stealthy manner to
deliberately avoid being seen
forlorn: appearing hopeless or miserable because
of abandonment
sullied: soiled, dirtied or tarnished
1998: Contactopaque: not transparent, blocking light
azure: sky blue colour
felicities: happy occasions
indefatigable: tireless, inexhaustible
briar: a woody, thorny plant
blighted: harmed or destroyed
deputising: temporarily acting in the place of
something or someone else
1978: Standard Eight: Hadedas and Earthwormsraffi sh: suggestively vulgar, or carelessly
unconventional
belligerent: hostile or aggressive
irrevocable: not able to be reversed or changed
pedagogical: related to teaching or education
alumni: former students
endowments: donated funds
lucerne: another name for alfalfa, a kind of plant
apprised: informed or told
mufti: casual dress
hierarchical: arranged in order of rank or
importance
prerogative: a right or privilege
vagaries: unexpected or inexplicable changes
impermeable: impossible to penetrate
anschluss: a political or economic union
impetuous: impulsive
raison d’être: reason or justifi cation
impasse: an impossibly diffi cult situation
in loco parentis: in the place of a parent
conscription: compulsory enrolment in military
service
suavities: smooth, sophisticated mannerisms
de facto: in fact or reality
philanthropic: seeking to promote or ensure the
welfare of others
slovenliness: untidy dress or appearance
dudgeon: feeling of resentment
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Questions
1. Review the opening section of the novel, titled ‘A Letter’. Do you believe this is an eff ective
introduction to the novel? Provide sound reasoning for your response. (3)
2. Comment on Pim’s relationship with his family as depicted in the chapter ‘1998: Contact’. (3)
3. What evidence is there to suggest that Pim and Lally’s South African heritage is an uncomfortable
subject in this scene? Explain your answer fully. (4)
4. What do we learn about Lally’s character and her life at school in the chapter ‘1978: Standard Eight:
Hadedas and Earthworms’? (5)
?
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Total: [15]
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Annotated essay examples
Essay topic 1:Discuss the physical ways in which Lally’s emotions manifest themselves in The Benefi ciaries,
and explain why she experiences her emotions in this very particular way. Your answer
should be approximately 600 words in length and should provide concise, relevant examples
from the text wherever possible.
Notes on the essay topic:
• This topic directs you to discuss the theme of physicality in the novel and, specifi cally, as it applies
to Lally’s physical ailments as expressions of her emotions.
• The word count is specifi ed clearly and should be adhered to.
• You are asked to refer to the novel closely, meaning that you should include examples and
quotations as supporting evidence for your points. You should not simply retell the plot of the
novel in your essay; your supporting evidence should be concise and carefully selected examples
that illustrate your argument.
• Key words include ‘physical’, ‘emotions’, ‘manifest’ and ‘experiences’ — these are words that should
be used in the essay itself.
Essay: Comments:
In The Beneficiaries, Lally’s realisation that apartheid society is based on a morally corrupt system of beliefs provokes an incredibly intense emotional response. Lally’s inability to deal with the intensity of her emotions, however, means that they are instead turned inward and manifest themselves in a variety of physical disorders. Rather than working through the trauma caused by the knowledge that her society is morally baseless, Lally’s method of ‘coping’ by suppressing her pain results in the development of a severe eating disorder, insomnia and panic attacks.
Note the structure of the
introductory paragraph:
the thesis statement is
indicated in bold (this
is the main argument
that will be referred to
throughout the essay).
The underlined sentence
gives a ‘preview’ of the
argument, as these are
the topics that will be
discussed further in the
body of the essay.
Intr
od
uct
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The reader soon comes to realise that Lally’s anorexia is a means for her to retain some semblance of control over her own life. Early on in the novel, Lally is described as a ‘difficult eater’ whose mealtime habits are monitored by the matron of the school. She is often described as lean and thin in appearance, both as a teenager and an adult. When Pim’s brother Michael comments on her thinness, she feels ‘a fierce surge of pride at her self-control’, indicating that she does not starve herself for aesthetic reasons, but because she enjoys the sense of control it gives her. Realising that she is irretrievably caught up in a corrupt political system, which she cannot change or escape from, she finds relief in her ability to maintain control over what happens to her body. As she later observes, the ‘only thing she was always able to control was her own body’.
In the second paragraph,
the sentence in bold
indicates the topic
sentence: this is the point
that this paragraph will
deal with. The quotations
and examples from the
text support the claim
being made by the topic
sentence. The underlined
sentences form the
analysis or elaboration
of this point, and explain
its relevance to the thesis
statement.
Later on in the novel, as Lally comes to recognise the inherent corruption of the school institution, the food provided to her by the school comes to represent its immorality and depravity. This realisation, prompted by the selection of prefects in her Standard Nine year, coincides with a marked development in the severity of her eating disorder. In rejecting the school’s food, which she describes as ‘scabrous, tainted, scrofulous, peccant, gangrenous’, Lally is symbolically rejecting the beliefs that both the school and apartheid are based on, and purging herself of the corrupting influences of both institutions.
Though this paragraph
is linked in subject to the
previous paragraph, it is a
new point and, therefore,
a new paragraph has
been started. Note
how, throughout the
essay, direct quotations
are seamlessly
and grammatically
incorporated into the
sentences.
Lally also experiences severe bouts of insomnia throughout the novel. She is often described as having difficulty sleeping, rising early in the morning or lying awake during the night, plagued by a feeling of restlessness. The occasional relief she experiences from her insomnia coincides with instances of emotional or psychological well-being, when she first arrives at Pim’s farm for the short holiday, for example, or when she watches Sipho from her dormitory window. Her difficulty in sleeping indicates unresolved anxiety, which plagues her on a sub-conscious level and is only alleviated when she leaves the school or experiences some form of emotional comfort.
Again, take note of
the T-E-A structure of
this paragraph (Topic
sentence — Evidence —
Analysis). The sentence
in bold is the topic
sentence; the quotations
and examples provide
evidence, and the
underlined sentences are
the analysis of this point.
Bo
dy
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On several occasions in the novel, Lally also suffers from panic attacks brought on by unpleasant or confusing realisations. The first of these occurs after her classmate, Zulu, is unjustly blamed for a classroom prank; in this instance, Lally finds herself sobbing uncontrollably in her dormitory, where she is comforted by Nomda. As an adult, she experiences the physical sensations associated with these panic attacks when unexpectedly confronted by the traumas of her past, in the form of a racing heart, a metallic taste in her mouth and nausea. This demonstrates how Lally’s emotions, particularly those she has suppressed, manifest themselves physically.
Note the use of
connective words
to link paragraphs,
which ensures the
logical organisation
and progression of
the argument. Other
potential connectives
that can be used include
‘furthermore’, ‘moreover’,
‘further to’, ‘in addition to’.
Throughout the novel, Lally is confronted with difficult truths and realisations about the society in which she lives; truths that provoke intense emotional reactions. Rather than dealing with her emotions, however, Lally suppresses her pain. As a result, she experiences various physical ailments, including anorexia, insomnia and panic attacks, as physical manifestations of the emotional traumas she is refusing to deal with.
The concluding
paragraph sums up the
argument, drawing on
words and phrases used
in both the question and
the introduction, but
restated in an original
way. The sentence in bold
indicates a restatement of
the thesis statement.
Bo
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Co
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usi
on
Historical and literary contexts
Literary analysis
Content, contextual and essay questions, as well as varied enrichment tasks
Unique Act-based learning format
Section on exam readiness
Perforated rubrics
Rigorously annotated edition of the text included
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